45S 



EUPHORBIACEAE. 



Vol. II. 



2. Acalypha virginica L. Virginia 

 Three-.seeded Mercury. Mer- 

 cury-weed. Fig. 2722. 



Acalypha virginica L. Sp. PI. 1003. 1753. 



Dark green or becoming purplish, some- 

 what pubescent. Stem erect or ascending, 

 3-2 tall ; leaves ovate or elliptic, lo"-4' long, 

 thin, coarsely serrate except near the base; 

 staminate and pistillate flowers in the same 

 axillary clusters, the staminate spike pedun- 

 cled, usually included in the large palmately 

 lobed bract ; pistillate flowers 1-3 at the base 

 of the staminate peduncle; capsule 3-Iobed, 

 subglobose, about iV in diameter, smooth, 

 sometimes slightly pubescent ; seeds ovoid, 

 reddish, striate. 



In woods and thickets. Nova Scotia to Minne- 

 sota, Florida and Texas. Occurs at 3000 ft. in 

 Georgia. Upper leaves commonly forming a 

 flat-topped cluster. June-Oct. 



3. Acal3rpha gracilens A. Gray. Slender 

 Three-seeded Mercury. Fig. 2723. 



Acalypha gracilens A. Gray, Man. 408. 1848. 



Acalypha virginica var. gracilens Muell. Arg. 

 Linnaea 34; 45. 1865. 



Pale green, pubescent, often densely glandu- 

 lar. Stem slender, erect, ^'-2^" tall, usually 

 branched, the branches often nearly filiform, 

 spreading or divergent; leaves lanceolate or 

 linear-oblong, S''~- long, usually firm, acut- 

 ish, serrate, narrowed to a short petiole; 

 staminate and pistillate flowers in the same 

 axillary clusters ; staminate spike very slen- 

 der, usually exceeding the many-cleft bract ; 

 pistillate flowers l or several; capsule subglo- 

 bose, about i' in diameter; seeds globose- 

 ovoid, dark red, or gray mottled with red, 

 striate-pitted. 



In dry woods and thickets. New Hampshire to 

 Kansas. Florida and Texas. Occurs 2000 ft. in 

 South Carolina, June-Sept. 



7. TRAGIA [Plumier] L. Sp. PI. 980. 1753. 



Monoecious herbs, or shrubs, sometimes climbing, usually armed with stiff stinging hairs. 

 Leaves alternate, toothed or somewhat lobed, mostly cordate, petioled; flowers in racemes, 

 or spicate racemes, bracteolate, apetalous; staminate flowers with a 3-5-parted calyx and 1-3 

 or rarely numerous stamens ; pistillate flowers with a 3-8-lobed calyx, the segments entire or 

 pinnatifid, a 3-celled ovary with I ovule in each cavity, and 3 styles, often united to above 

 the middle; capsule 3-lobed, separating into 3 2-valved carpels; seeds subglobose; endosperm 

 fleshy. [From Tragus, the Latin name of Hieronymus Bock, 1498-1553, a German botanist.] 



About 50 species, mostly natives of tropical regions. Besides the following, 4 others occur in 

 he southern United States. Type species ; Tragia volnbilis L. 



Stems not twining. 



htaminate calyx 4-Iobed ; stamens 2. i. T.nrcns. 



Stc'minate calyx 3-lobed : stamens 3. 2. T.nepetaefolia. 



Staminate calyx 4-5-lobed ; stamens 4 or 5. 3. T.ramosa. 



Stems tw'ning. 4- T. macrocarpa. 



